Word: things
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...games to win from Harvard; nor can we say that Harvard would not do the same to win from Yale. Our football hopes are centered on that contest, there is no denying it. The CRIMSON is behind the team as it never was before and believes that the same thing may be said of the entire College. But at the same time we must admit the gloomy truth of "Stadium's" words...
...thing we should like to hear at the Stadium this afternoon: namely, more frequent cheers of the same loud and spirited sort as we had last week. Several men who were on the field and side lines last Saturday have remarked that the cheering was splendid as far as it went and that it promised well for the big games. They ask for just a little more of it, and we are sure that a word to the cheer leaders in enough...
...CRIMSON hopes that this evening the class of 1916 will send a record number of men out for positions on its news board. We need not here enlarge on the opportunities offered for interesting work in a CRIMSON competition. But one thing we should like to make clear and that is that, if there are any men who are standing off from the news competitions in hopes of finding easier means of making the paper through the editorial competitions, they are making a great mistake. Very few men are elected from editorial competitions and those few cannot get the training...
...stories only Mr. Smith's preposterous "Page from the Life of the Missing Link" seems really to do its work. It is the kind of thing that a man writes as a "part," perhaps; but it is thoroughly funny and sincere. Of the other stories "There Was One," though not as bad as its title, is a study in anti-climax which hardly entertains us enough as we go along to make us forgive the hoax. "Chapters from a Summer Romance" is conventional in detail and feeble in situation: in the descriptive parts "scarcely a sound broke the quiet," although...
...fourth place, do one thing at a time and you will never have to wonder why your studies are suffering. Then your standing at the Office and among the fellows will be good. Taking one thing at a time is, it is true, a prosaic way of doing things, but it is a way that has proved itself right. Your success will depend much upon your earnestness of purpose, which can be secured only from whole-hearted attention to the business in hand...